Title: HI136 The History of Germany Lecture 10
1HI136 The History of GermanyLecture 10
- The Rise of Extremism and the Collapse of Weimar
Democracy
2Left-wing Extremism
- Jan. 1919 A number of radical socialist groups
came to together to found the Kommunistische
Partei Deutschlands (KPD). - Suppression of the Spartacus Uprising (Jan. 1919)
and the murder of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa
Luxemburg left a legacy of bitterness and meant
the German left was split throughout the Weimar
period. - The KPDs support mostly came from the unskilled
working class and the unemployed. - April 1920 The Leftists expelled and form the
Kommunistische Arbeiter Partei Deutschlands
(Communist Workers Party of Germany, KAPD). - October 1920 The collapse of the USPD benefited
the Communists, whose membership swelled to over
400,000. - But their electoral appeal was limited in the
Reichstag elections of 1920 the KPD won just 2.1
of the vote. - Involvement in insurrections in 1921 and 1923
underlined the Communists fundamental opposition
to the democratic system.
3Right-wing Extremism
- Interwar Germany a fertile breeding ground for
radical right-wing organizations. - 1919 Anton Drexler founds the Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei (German Workers Party, DAP). - Adolf Hitler joined the DAP in Sept. 1919,
quickly rising through the ranks to become the
partys chief theorist and propaganda officer. - Feb. 1920 Hitler heads a committee which draws
up the Partys 25 Point Programme which remains
the basis of Nazi ideology until 1945. - April 1920 The DAP renamed the
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei
(National Socialist German Workers Party, NSDAP
or Nazi for short). - July 1921 Hitler ousts Drexler is appointed
Party Chairman. - November 1923 Attempt to seize power through
violence in the failed Munich Beer Hall Putsch. - 1925 Nazi party refounded with a new commitment
to achieving power through legal means. - But still had little popular support they won
only 2.6 of the vote in the Reichstag elections
of 1928.
4Paramilitary Organizations
- Loss of state monopoly of violence in 1918.
- Cult of vigilantism and Fehemorde (vendetta
killings) by right-wing groupings. - Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold Founded in 1924
by the Social Democrat Otto Hörsing to protect
the republic from attacks by political enemies.
Officially non-partisan, but run financed by
the SPD and the Trade Unions. It had around 3
million members by 1932. - Roter Frontkämpferbund (Red Fighter League)
Founded in 1924 as the paramilitary wing of the
KPD. Its aim was to defend the working classes
from attacks from the radical right. By 1927 it
had 111,000 members. - Sturmabteilung (Storm Division, SA) Founded
in 1921 as the paramilitary wing of the NSDAP.
Acted as a uniformed guard to protect speakers at
party meetings and intimidate opposition. Had
55,000 members by 1923, rising to c.500,000 a
decade later. - Stahlhelm. Bund der Frontsoldaten (steel helmet.
League of Frontline Soldiers) founded 1918 by
Franz Seldte antidemocratic, nationalistic,
non-partisan but close to DNVP. Had 500,000
members by 1930.
5The Great Depression
- October 1929 the Wall Street Crash led to a
worldwide economic downturn. - Germany was particularly hard hit the German
economy was heavily dependent on foreign loans
and the banking system was geared towards
short-term credit to finance long-term ventures. - As foreign investment dried up and debts were
called in, German firms folded and banks
collapsed leading to mass unemployment. - 2 million Germans out of work by the winter of
1929-30. - Unemployment reached 3 million in 1931 had
risen to 5.1 million by Sept. 1932. It peaked at
6.1 million in early 1933. - This led to material hardship, but also had an
important psychological effect fear,
uncertainty, loss of pride and status, feeling
that the fabric of society was unravelling. - The economic crisis quickly became a political
crisis as the social insurance system became
overloaded.
Soucre R. Overy, The Penguin Historical Atlas
of the Third Reich (1996)
6The Final Crisis, 1930-33
- March 1930 Hermann Müllers Grand Coalition
collapsed when the DVP and SPD members of the
Cabinet could not agree on how to solve the
crisis. - Hindenburg appointed Heinrich Brüning, leader of
the Centre Party, Chancellor. His lack of
charisma and unpopular deflationary policies
(cuts in public spending tax rises) meant that
he was unable to command a majority in the
Reichstag. Thus from the summer of 1930 onwards
he was forced to use emergency powers to pass any
legislation. - But the Depression had radicalized German
politics and the parties of the extreme left and
right continued to gain support a very real
fear of communist revolution amongst
conservatives and the middle classes. - By 1930 the Nazis were the 2nd largest party in
the Reichstag. - Oct. 1931 the Harzburg Front anti-republican
alliance between the Nazis, Alfred Hugenburgs
DNVP and the Stahlhelm. - 1932 Hitler confident enough to challenge
Hindenburg for the Presidency. - By May 1932 Brüning had lost the support of the
President and his advisors his policies had not
significantly solved the problems caused by the
Depression or stopped the escalating violence in
the streets. - June 1932 Franz von Papen head the right-wing
Cabinet of Barons.
7Chancellors, 1930-33
General Kurt von Schleicher (Non party) Dec. 1932
Jan. 1933
Franz von Papen (Centre Party) June Dec. 1932
Heinrich Brüning (Centre Party) March 1930 May
1932
8The Final Crisis, 1930-33
- July 1932 Preussenschlag The illegal
constitutional coup in which the elected SPD
government of Prussia deposed by the army on the
orders of von Papen. A Reich Commissioner was
installed and Social Democratic and liberal
officials were replaced by conservative civil
servants. - Nov. 1932 Papen replaced by General Kurt von
Schleicher. - Papen enters into secret negotiations with the
Nazis, big business and large landowners designed
to bring about his return to power with a
majority in the Reichstag. - Jan. 1933 Hindenburg reluctantly agrees to
dismiss Schleicher and replace him with Hitler. - The Conservatives convinced that they would be
able to control Hitler and the Nazis Papen was
Vice-Chancellor and their were only 3 Nazis in
the Cabinet.
9Hitlers first Cabinet, 30 January 1933 Seated
(left to right) Hermann Göring, Hitler, Franz
von Papen Standing (left to right) Baron
Konstantin von Neurath (Foreign Minister),
Günther Gereke (Commissioner for Job Creation),
Count Lutz Schwerin von Krosigk (Finance
Minister), Wilhelm Frick (Interior Minister),
General Werner von Blomberg (Defence Minister),
Alfred Hugenberg (Minister of Agriculture and
Economics)
10Reasons for the Collapse of Weimar Democracy
- Domestic Factors
- Lack of popular support
- Constitutional flaws
- Role of established elites
- International Factors
- Legacy of Versailles
- World economic crisis (the Great Depression)
- General crisis of liberal democracy
11Lack of support for Democracy
- The Republic never enjoyed much popular support
people accepted it, but there was never
widespread identification with the Republican
system and values. - No strong tradition of participatory politics in
Germany democratic institutions relatively new. - Negative experience of democracy the Republic
associated with political economic crisis,
failure to solve the problems of the Depression. - Factional nature of party politics most parties
relied on their core constituencies did not
reach out to other groups. Parties on the left
and right fundamentally opposed to democratic
politics. Split in the left ? parties unable or
unwilling to work together to defend the system. - The Nazis much better than other parties at
targeting their message at disaffected groups.
12Constitutional Flaws
- Proportional Representation
- 1 seat in the Reichstag for every 60,000 votes.
- Led to the proliferation of parties.
- Led to weak coalition governments.
- Article 48
- Allowed the President to assume emergency powers
and pass bills into law without the approval of
the Reichstag. - Open to misuse when the President is not
supportive of the Republican system.
13Role of Elites
- Powerful established interest groups big
business, landowners, the Army, Civil Service
etc. ambivalent towards democracy. - The military-conservative clique of advisors
around the President had been considering an
authoritarian reconfiguration of the Republic
since 1929. - The middle and upper classes saw the Communists
as a bigger threat than the Nazis.
14The Legacy of Versailles
- The Republic blamed for signing the humiliating
peace in 1919. - The Stab in the Back a powerful theme in the
propaganda of the right. - On-going frustration over the failure to revise
the peace settlement. - Germany continues to feel like a second-class
power. - All of this undermines support in the Republican
system and the moderate parties.
What we will lose! propaganda poster
opposing the Treaty of Versailles (c. 1919)
15The Great Depression
- Radicalized German society and politics.
- Moderate parties and the democratic system
apparently unable to solve the problems of
unemployment and social insurance. - So people turned to the parties of the extreme
left and right who offered radical solutions and
strong leadership. - The unemployed turned to the KPD, while the
middle classes turned to the Nazis.
16Soucre R. Overy, The Penguin Historical Atlas of
the Third Reich (1996)
17The European Context
- 26 democratic states in Europe in 1920. By 1938
there were only 10. - Reasons for democratic collapse (Robert Pearce)
- Threat from the Left
- Fear of the spread of the bacillus of
Bolshevism from Soviet Russia. - Aggrieved Nationalism
- The post-war settlement left many nations (both
victors and vanquished) dissatisfied. - Economic Crisis
- Fears of the collapse of capitalism and the
spread of Communism. Growing feeling that
democratic politicians could not run the economy
effectively and that the liberal democratic
system was unable to cope with the problems of
the modern world. - Weak democratic institutions/traditions
- History proves that dictatorships do not grow
out of strong and successful governments, but out
of weak and helpless governments. (Franklin
Delano Roosevelt)